US
innovation is plummeting faster than our Financial
Markets did during the
2008 financial crisis!
The
future of America is presently in peril, not just because of the
“banksters’’ shadowy ways, but because of a sputtering
Innovation Engine that has had the fuel “choked off’. It has now
gone “critical” and can no longer be left to only the carping of
the academic community.
The
chart to the right from the Financial Times: “China scientists lead
world in research growth” is
frightening in its implications. It requires an immediate and serious
congressional public policy response. Unfortunately most of those on the
front lines are skeptical about Washington’s ability to either
recognize the gravity of the situation or legislate any meaningful and
appropriate response.
President
Obama’s State-of-the-Union address had one overriding theme –
Jobs, Jobs, and Jobs. Consider that 50% of all jobs in America are in small
business and 70% of new jobs have been coming from Small Business in recent
years, as corporate America ‘downsized’,
‘right-sized’ and ‘outsourced’.
The US
has statistically been creating 30 Million new jobs a year to offset 28
Million jobs that disappear through the capitalist system’s process of
‘creative destruction’ (1). The job destruction element continues
to advance and we are possibly witnessing even accelerating rates of
obsolescence. The jobs creation element however is at a standstill in the US.
The
“State-of –the-Union” address coyly spoke of the 2 Million
jobs ‘saved’, because the actual ‘new’ jobs created
was statistically too small and embarrassing to highlight (2)(3) . Recent
years have seen job creation in retail, real estate, health care and
government which economists consider ‘consumption’ jobs. Where
are our new types of work that are economically considered national
‘productivity’ jobs and create exportable product or services
that others will pay for?
The US
is no longer a Manufacturing driven economy, or even a global Service
economy. The US has sustained itself since the dot.com bubble implosion as a
Financial Economy which is now seriously impaled and faces potentially years
of ‘rehab’ efforts. Future jobs are not going to come from the
old “Corporate America” but rather from a new “Small
Business America” - new innovation’ - creating new types of work.
Ten years ago there was no such thing as a ‘web master’ or an
‘E-Bay business’. America must maintain & even challenge
itself to step up the pace of innovation. The frank reality is we are falling
behind.
“The numbers of
engineering graduates in China and India far outpace that of the United States.
In China, it is 600,000; in India, 350,000; in the United States, 70,000, and
many of these are foreign students who, more likely than not, will be
returning to their home countries.” Senator Edward Kennedy
10-25-05 Testimony - Senate Record
Until
recent years, Product Research & Development was typically retained
within the US. This is no longer the case as it is increasingly moved
offshore as the final unique process within the product development cycle
left in America. Product development cycles are now part of more complex,
integrated operational research strategies oriented towards reduced cycle
time, Six Sigma quality and improved supply chain efficiencies. Foreign
governments are eager & financially capable of assisting, granting tax
relief, or accelerating academic funding. Meanwhile the US focuses heavily on
“Shovel-Ready” jobs?
The
government needs to understand this is not the Roosevelt depression era of
Labor – construction today is highly automated with minimal labor
content & highly productive skilled trades personnel. However, like
always, when the government contract ends those jobs will end again!
The
Financial Times’ chart obviously does not bode well for new technology
‘start-up’s’ going forward. But what may be more telling is
the Wall Street Journal’s January 26th article entitled; “US Keeps Foreign Ph.D’s”. The
article’s title completely misses the mark and demonstrates the hubris
inherent and hidden within the American problem. We have
‘reworked’ the recent Wall Street Journal chart by removing China
and focusing on how many PhDs were leaving before the financial crisis began
in 2007. You get a completely and much more accurate portrait! The chart
“Not Staying in School” suggests top technical talent is leaving
America. The creators of tomorrow’s jobs are ‘getting out of
Dodge’!
The Wall Street Journal, government agencies and policy makers, base their
analysis on data from the US Energy Department’s Oak Ridge Institute of
Science & Engineering. The seriously outdated data takes PhD’s
graduating in 2002, when places like China (which we removed) were just
beginning to emerge as the WTO (World Trade Organization) trading agreement
kicked in. Research facilities in China & India were still under
construction. Further the data considers foreign Ph.D’s still in the US
as of 2007 – the height of employment prior to the financial crisis and
the loss of 8 Million jobs. Since the financial crisis universities have been
hit hard. These were just some of the reasons we were forced to remove China
from the graphic to actually get a better understanding of the reality of
what is going on. We simply can’t wait until the next study might be
done. The problem has truly gone critical.
Post
doctoral positions and fellowships are now being taken by candidates that in
previous years would already be assistant or associate level professors.
Current Ph.D’s are being forced to seek employment which is more and
more in their home country or emerging market centers where the exiting &
funded research is being conducted.
“..
analysts see signs that recent foreign grads are increasingly likely to
return home, particularly in today's weak job market. "I have no doubt
that the 2009 data will show a dramatic shift," said Vivek Wadwha,
executive in residence at Duke University's Pratt School of Engineering, who
has been warning loudly about the threat that trend would pose to innovation
in the U.S. In October 2008, Mr. Wadwha and others used Facebook to question
1,224 foreigners studying at U.S. institutions at all levels. More than half
the Indians and 40% of the Chinese said they hoped to return home within five
years.”
01-26-10 - Foreign Ph.D.s Stay in U.S. After Graduation Wall
Street Journal
PATENT
DEVELOPMENT
Let’s
consider product Patents to further illustrate the growing problem.
The
“2009 US Patent Leaders” graphic, on the surface appears to be a
glowing testimonial to IBM & possibly Microsoft, but it begs the real
questions.
- First: Why
are there so few other US corporations with any significant patent
activity?
- Secondly:
Where was the research actually done at IBM or Microsoft?
Former
renowned US centers such as Bell Labs, Xerox’s Menlo Park and
IBM’s Thomas Watson Center (US facility) are shells of their former
global domination.
Might
there be strong likelihood that many of these patents came from the extensive
research facilities expanding rapidly around the globe since 2002?
IBM - Global
Research Centers
"One
of the most important things with an academic background is the work that you
do, and is it exciting? … career opportunities, quality-of-life
concerns and family ties were major factors. Some 70% of the Chinese and 61%
of the Indians said opportunities for professional advancement were better at
home.”
01-26-10 - Foreign Ph.D.s Stay in U.S. After Graduation
Wall Street Journal
“China
is out on its own, far ahead of the pack,” said James
Wilsdon, science policy director at the Royal Society in London.
“If anything, China’s recent research performance has exceeded
even the high expectations of four or five years ago”
01-25-10 - China scientists lead world in research growth
Financial Times
MICROSOFT
Global Research
Centers
|
|
“Jonathan
Adams, research evaluation director at Thomson Reuters, said China’s
“awe-inspiring” growth had put it in second place to the US
– and if it continues on its trajectory it will be the largest
producer of scientific knowledge by 2020” (4)
|
Microsoft Research
“In
recruiting for Carnegie Mellon, Mr. Zhang, now a research assistant
professor at Carnegie Mellon's Silicon Valley campus finds young Chinese
less eager to come to the U.S. than those of his generation. "Life
in China is getting better. There are research alternatives in
China—like Microsoft China," he said.
"They can get good mentoring and advice there, instead of coming to
the U.S."
01-26-10
- Foreign Ph.D.s Stay in U.S. After Graduation
Wall Street Journal
|
According
to James
Wilsdon, science policy director at the Royal Society in
London, three main factors are driving Chinese research:
- First is the
government’s enormous investment, with funding increases far above
the rate of inflation, at all levels of the system from schools to
postgraduate research.
- Second is
the organized flow of knowledge from basic science to commercial
applications.
- Third is the
efficient and flexible way in which China is tapping the expertise of
its extensive scientific diaspora in North America and Europe, tempting
back mid-career scientists with deals that allow them to spend part of
the year working in the west and part in China.
America
is currently still the leader in innovation. Time however is rapidly running
out if we do not dramatically focus our political capital on this rupturing
situation that will spill out the headline news in the future – when
like the financial crisis it will be too late.
At
this very moment, students are making career decisions. If the technology
field they are attracted to is being “outsourced”, have no
research funding and little prospects for work, why would they consider
$200,000 in educational costs? They know they likely won’t get teaching
assistant jobs during their required post graduate work since former students
are forced to hang onto them as teaching jobs are being cut? So what are they
doing? They consider other fields like Law. This is because there are
mountains of work in government, writing new laws & regulations that
further burden small business with administrative filing requirements!
Government work even pays better! (see: ‘The Dreams of Our Fathers?’)
Their
view is government is one of the growth areas in the US economy that pays the
best & what the chart to the right fails to point out – is one of
the few employers that still offers a pension plan (and not at 67 either).
You don’t need a PhD to do the analysis on this one.
Creating
old style, ‘make work’ jobs is like giving the masses fish when
they are hungry versus teaching them how to fish. We must do both. We need
new types of work based on new Innovation. We can’t go back; we must go
forward – and urgently!
SOURCES:
(1)
01-30-10 – Steve Forbes, Publisher Forbes Magazine in an FSN
Interview 01-30-10
(2) 02-02-10 – Recovery.gov
Tracking
(3) 02-01-10 - At Issue: Counting the Jobs Created New
York Times
(4) 01-25-10 - China scientists lead world in research growth
Financial Times
(5) 01-26-10 - Foreign Ph.D.s Stay in U.S. After Graduation Wall Street Journal
(6) 10-25-05 - Senator Ted Kennedy Testimony - Senate Record
Govtracks.US
Gordon T. Long
Tipping
Points
Mr. Long is a former senior group
executive with IBM & Motorola, a principle in a high tech public start-up
and founder of a private venture capital fund. He is presently involved in
private equity placements internationally along with proprietary trading
involving the development & application of Chaos Theory and Mandelbrot
Generator algorithms.
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